Thanks for bringing to us Julie Blackmon, a remarkably talented photographic artist.
This picture you have chosen is simply constructed by riveting our attention. as the child hurtles in the air!
Interestingly, there's a lot of chopping off of forms - shadows, the child to the left and the adult, each more than we'd likely have chosen. However the "half of power line" is so strong that we are suffieny satisfied that all is balanced and consistent.
It is both well done and somewhat disturbing as her infant seems frightened, (but that could simply be a sampling error in photographing the face of a babbling child).
Still, this photographer is almost in the class of
Loretta Lux in using children as tools for her creations. Lux is technically on a very high plane and the children seem to be used as models, with no hint of sensuality we'd expect only from adults. Likely as not, more than a few will take umbridge at any suggestion that Blackmon is any way beyond the bounds of innocence, with the "defense" that she takes what she sees. Actually, her published body of work shows that almost all her pictures of her children are indeed very carefully staged, so all nuances are intentional. But this is work to please herself as both an artist and a mother, so, in the end, her own judgement must cover us too and , trusting her, in the end, we have no residual angst. Most of her technical expertise is in setting up and lighting the images, it seems as opposed to Lux whose post processing is intricate, imagined as well as Grimm's
Fairy Tales and executed as if by a Flemish painter of old! Blackmon's, picture of children on a sofa is one such picture that originally drew my sense of caution. The little girl on the right has been posed, I was originally moved to conclude, in a revealing pose. Her dress has been raised to reveal a naked thigh and no hint of underwear.
Even hints of constructed eroticism using children as models is fraught with risks. At least the totally nude pictures of children taken by
Jock Sturges, as far as I have discovered, do not show anything but innocence. There's not even a suggestion of planned eroticism. However, he was arrested and faced prosecution, although, thank goodness, totally vindicated!
But in the end, this artist is strong, imaginative and the totality of her work challenges us to celebrate what's around us, day in, day out! One does not need to go far to find subjects to throw light on!
Thanks again for this super link!
Asher